"Voter ID laws" are mostly voter suppression. I'd support making election day a national holiday or vote on weekends.

Net Neutrality

I think I'm a supporter of moving towards some sort of "basic income". I think it's just absolutely required as we move more towards an automated workforce.

Regulation of financial industry

I lean right on these policies

Affirmative action in hiring and college entrance requirements is inappropriate and may do more harm than good

Gun owner rights

Against government "bailouts" of failing private corporations (like banks) for the sake of economic stability (I'd say avoid these failures altogether with stronger regulations)

I lean libertarian or "other" on these policies

I hate gerrymandering, Super PACS, and Citizens United

I am very much against government surveillance of citizens activity on the internet, support civil liberties

Expand nuclear power generation (unsure if this lines up more with the left or the right?)

I think marriages should be removed entirely from the public sphere, and be left to religious institutions if desired. This is a long shot, so in the meantime I will whole-heartedly support legalization of same-sex marriage (leans left)

No Opinion on / Unsure of my opinion on...

Immigration issues (should children of illegal immigrants get citizenship? Should illegal immigrants be denied healthcare?)

Abortion

Free Trade, globalization, US participation in UN,

Education: vouchers for private schools, charter schools

Labor / Unions

Should a business be able to deny service to a customer for any reason?

How to solve the problem of college education cost in the US

Online political surveys

I took 3 online surveys where I note my opinion on the issues, and the software displays results showing which candidate most closely matches my stances

She or doesn't support relaxation of drug laws (or didn't until it became popular)

Background reading: In the 2012 general presidential election, I explained why I chose to vote for Gary Johnson in this post. Some of my opinions on the issues have changed since then, but the logic of voting for a "long-shot" candidate in the general election still stands.